Menu

M66

Leo Triplet

Galaxy Leo Mag 8.9

Données de l'Objet

Désignation du Catalogue
M66
Type
Galaxy
Constellation
Leo
Magnitude
8.9
Ascension Droite
11h 20m 15.0s
Déclinaison
+12° 59' 30.0"
Distance
36,000,000 années-lumière
Taille Angulaire
8.7
Afficher sur la Carte du Ciel

Image de Relevé

Chargement de l'image de relevé…

À propos de M66

Description

M66 is the largest and brightest member of the Leo Triplet, about 36 million light-years from Earth. It is a spiral galaxy spanning about 95,000 light-years with noticeably asymmetric spiral arms — distorted by gravitational interactions with its neighbors M65 and NGC 3628. The galaxy has hosted four observed supernovae.

Conseils d'Observation

Located just 20 arcminutes east of M65 — the two galaxies share the same low-power field. M66 is slightly brighter and larger than M65. A 4-inch telescope shows an elongated glow. An 8-inch reveals an asymmetric brightness distribution and hints of spiral structure. The three galaxies of the Leo Triplet can be seen together in a wide-field eyepiece. Best observed from March through June.

Histoire

Discovered by Charles Messier on March 1, 1780, together with M65. Four supernovae have been observed in M66: 1973R, 1989B, 1997bs, and 2009hd — making it one of the more prolific supernova hosts.

Faits Amusants

M66's spiral arms are clearly asymmetric and displaced from center — pulled out of shape by the gravitational tug-of-war with M65 and NGC 3628. Its high star formation rate and four observed supernovae may be linked to this gravitational interaction, which compresses gas and triggers star formation.

Photos de la Communauté (1)

Credit: ESO. License: CC BY 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: ESO. License: CC BY 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026